rachel: the new king will attend a tribute to our rare saturday session. good morning, rachel. it s been an interesting morning and we ve watched the proclamation of king charles iii at st. james palace built in the 1500s by henry t viii and the guards take off the famous bearskin hats and you can bearly
includes defender of the faith and with that is not just the faith, but the values that christianity, i think, blessed the world with in so many ways. there is questions about what will happen and we ll be talking about that a little bit later on with franklin graham because the queen was famously religious and took her faith very seriously. there are some questions about whether charles is as religious as his mom if at all. he seems to be more in tune with the religion of climate change. will: so, pete, like you, i have at times watched prime minister s questions. i love it because it s a pugilist sport and i wish our country was like that and there s expectation that the united kingdom s new prime minister liz truss will take to a microphone in the very near future. pete: i would remember watching
sovereignty. rachel: as we look live at king charles iii s ascension in london, he paid tribute to his late mother queen elizabeth and her remarkable life of service. will: it shows the majesty serving the new uk prime minister. pete: here to discuss, former adviser to margaret thatcher. will and i can t figure our transition here, nile, how will they figure theirs from such a seminole figure dead at a timed to the tradition in the a political nation of her tradition to now king charles. what does that look like? thank you for having me on the show today and truly historic moment in the united kingdom today with the proclamation of king charles iii as king. so, you know, an incredible moment for the british people. after 70 years, queen elizabeth
it was always about the people, and i think it s interesting that very early on in this transition that we re talking about, prince charles basically said i don t want megha meghan e here and sent a message by referring to them as as harry and megan and not the titles and is he sending a message that we want people who are going to be servants and duty bound and not going to make the monarchy about themselveses. is this him carrying on that legacy and that what those actions were about? that s a great point, and i think the king s speech yesterday was all about duty, service, sacrifice, living for the sake of the british nation and also of course the commonwealth of the nation s 56 countries and 2.5 billion people. so the king really wants to continue to be the legacy, the
and good morning to all of you. we ve been discussing various aspects of it this morning. as americans, should we care? do we care? and if it is important, which i think it is, what aspects of it are as far as importance of the monarchy, the standards it maintains for a society, a defender of the faith, defense of western civilization, and will king charles, king charles iii, is he going to maintain what queen elizabeth did by more or less being a political? some of his comments on climate and others seem to be progressive. will he move in that direction? we want to get to the things that matter to us here in america. rachel: yes. will: i ve had complicated personal feelings about this throughout the last several days in that in no small manner rachel: let s say he didn t watch the crown. will: listen, i think there s actual substance to take from this and it is this, the united states of america fought a revolution so it did not have to bow to unearned royalty. united states of amer